The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams*The Restaurant at the end of the Universe by Douglas Adams*The Lord of the Rings by JRR TolkienThe Circle Series by Ted DekkerEnders Game, Speaker for the Dead, Xenocide, and Children of the Mind by Orson Scott CardHarry Potter Series by JK RowlingThe Hunt for Red October by Tom ClancyArtemis Fowl by Eoin ColferThe Count of Monte Cristo by Alexander DumasThe Hobbit by JRR TolkienThe Stand by Stephen KingThe Silmarillion by JRR TolkienDon Quixote by Cervantes

*I did not vote for the series, I voted for the first two, because I personally didn't like the last ones that much.Those are the ones I can think of off the top of my head.

I just may adopt this list for my winter reading. Anything and everything that I haven't read that's been voted on more than once.I'm really very curious about "Ender's Game" it seems like something I should have already knew about, but I've never heard of it

I just may adopt this list for my winter reading. Anything and everything that I haven't read that's been voted on more than once.I'm really very curious about "Ender's Game" it seems like something I should have already knew about, but I've never heard of it

I was thinking it as soon as we got 100 different places. Because right now, we only have 10 different places.

Just vote moar!

Natuilus' votes added and small mistake corrected for Stephen King's The Stand, which had three votes but was ranked witht he number twos.

I just may adopt this list for my winter reading. Anything and everything that I haven't read that's been voted on more than once.I'm really very curious about "Ender's Game" it seems like something I should have already knew about, but I've never heard of it

Same here, I read some of it, but I haven't read more

Spoiler:

Interviewer: Some people say they can’t understand your writing even after they read it two or three times. What approach would you suggest for them?

I just noticed that there is a vote for the Dirk Gently series - if we are counting this series as one item, then my vote for The Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul should count as a vote for Dirk Gently series.

Also, there appears to be a vote for the "Miles Vorkosigan series" and a separate vote for the "Vorkosigan saga". I think these are the same thing and should be combined.

The Prince of Nothing by R. Scott Bakker (or list as The Second Apocalypse if the wider arc is more noted here)A Song of Ice and Fire by George R. R. MartinDune by Frank HerbertHyperion Cantos by Dan SimmonsIlluminatus! Trilogy by Robert Shea & Robert Anton WilsonAnathem by Neal StephensonCatch-22 by Joseph HellerFoucault's Pendulum by Umberto EcoThe Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor DostoevskyThe Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch by Philip K. DickVALIS by Philip K. DickA Scanner Darkly by Philip K. Dick (enough of him, before he clogs the rest of the list, damnit)Heart of Darkness by Joseph ConradMalazan Book of the Fallen by Steven EriksonA Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter M. Miller, Jr.Oryx & Crake by Margaret AtwoodBlood Meridian by Cormac McCarthyLord of the Flies by William GoldingCat's Cradle by Kurt VonnegutThe Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K. LeGuin

I'm sure I'll want to revise this, but will refrain from doing so.

The position being taken is not to be mistaken for attempted education or righteous accusation. Only a description, just an observation on the pitiful condition of our degeneration.

Can I just throw in that I thought this could have been so much better. Instead of taking the story in a new direction, he basically flipped through the book picked pages at random and stuck some zombies in. I thought it was interesting but had the potential to be so much better. /rant (sorry)

Whelan wrote:

I Am Raven wrote:Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?Damn baby, you're so wet!